This was fixed a decade ago, in sensible-utils 0.0.8, as documented in
the resolution of Debian bug 567250, and confirmed in sensible-utils's
changelog.gz entry, dated 2013 June 6th.
** Changed in: sensible-utils (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed => Fix Released
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You received this bug notifica
Thank you! The ldd output included:
libcairo-gobject.so.2 => /usr/local/lib/libcairo-gobject.so.2
(0x7f960720)
It turns out that back in Ubuntu 16.04 we needed a newer libcairo to run
some external software (WeasyPrint), so libcairo 1.16.0 was installed
under /usr/local/. Deleting that
> Can you make sure all of your packages are up to date?
apt update and apt upgrade claim so. And:
$ apt-show-versions | grep -v 'not installed\|uptodate'
doesn't list any packages as being out of date.
> it may be some dependency of vim that is out of date trying to read
it.
It certainly se
I'm pretty sure it was set up however Ubuntu 16.04 installed it,
followed by any changes made by the 16.04–18.04 and 18.04–20.04
upgrades. Those first 2 upgrade were seamless in terms of the networking
working, so either they didn't make any changes or they updated things
automatically as required.
Public bug reported:
After upgrading a system running Ubuntu 20.04 to 22.04, vim.gtk3 no
longer runs:
$ vim.gtk3
vim.gtk3: error while loading shared libraries: libpng12.so.0: cannot open
shared object file: No such file or directory
(vim.basic still runs fine).
These are the vim packages
Intentional temporary regression: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-
bash/2014-09/msg00256.html
Sounds like an upstream fix will be forthcoming.
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https://bugs
Public bug reported:
I have Bash functions defined with punctuation-only names, such as - and
.., which now give errors when starting nested shells.
After a recent Shellshock patch, env shows these functions as having
names like BASH_FUNC_-(), and starting a second Bash in some way, such
as runni
> Man page contains the text:
>
> HISTSIZE The number of commands to remember in the command history
> (see HISTORY below). The default value is 500.
I think that means that if HISTSIZE isn't set at all, then Bash will act
as though HISTSIZE had been set to 500.
If you have HISTSIZE set, then th
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